Im a kiwi living in Australia and have built a new smart DNS system for geo unblocking services from around the world. I'm now looking for some testers to test the service before I put it in to public beta. The site has a few unique features that no other smart DNS has.1) you can have up to 3 locations (different internet connections) unblocked.2) you can add your own URLs (upto 20) to unblock and what country you want to make the URLs think your coming from.3) you can disable services you don't want

it also supports dynamic dns so if you dont have a fixed IP you don't have to worry. For a full list of channels the service currently supports see https://dns4me.net/channelsIf your keen on helping me to improve the service, goto the contact us page on https://dns4me.net and send me a message with the username you would like.

ThanksJason K

Considering DNS is only a directory service, it has absolutely no effect on websites viewer source IP access controls.

If sites are merely using DNS geo-location to send viewers to different hosts based on their DNS request source IP, this is a pretty laughable control.

The best explination on how the system works is on page 3 of this thread.

ThanksJason k

Ok, cheers for that.

Basically you are using DNS as a mechanism to set yourselves up as a MITM. (man in the middle).

What are you going to do when the content providers use HTTPS and/or DNSSEC?

Our system fully supports SSL (with out any certs needed) and works on non TLS sni devices even the custom domains, how we do this is a trick of the trade.DNSSEC is along was away from being widespread even if it does become the default we still have some ways around it.x-forwarded-for header is only relevant if its sent ;)

[EDIT: working with sydney & oregon servers. Something up with NZ one?]

Nah its just Akamai it sends you to the closest server based on the dns servers location, so by changing the dns server you get given a different Akamai caching server. There is usually a flow on effect when netflix has and issue so it might have already passed the AUS server.